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1.
In highly aligned connective tissues, such as tendon, collagen fibrils are linked together by proteoglycans (PGs). Recent mechanical and theoretical studies on tendon micromechanics have implied that PGs mediate mechanical interactions between adjacent collagen fibrils. We used transmission electron microscopy to observe the collagen fibril-PG interactions in porcine mitral valve chordae under variable loading conditions and found that PGs attached to collagen fibrils perpendicularly in the load-free situation, and became skewed when the chordae were loaded. The average skewness angle of PGs increased with the applied load, and hence the strain in the chordae. The observation of PG skewing with the application of load demonstrates that, in mitral valve chordae, interfibrillar slippage occurs and that PGs play a role in fibril-to-fibril interaction and likely transfer force. The results of this study provide new insights into the mechanical role of PGs and support some recent theoretical models.  相似文献   

2.
The structure and distribution of collagen fibres in chordae tendineae, anterior leaflet and annulus fibrous of human mitral valve has been investigated using high and small angle X-ray diffraction. The molecular packing of collagen in native mitral valve components is very similar to that in native rat tail tendon. The distribution and orientation of collagen fibres in unstretched and stretched specimens has been deduced by the arcing of the high and small angle meridional reflections. Collagen fibres, which are aligned along the chordae tendineae, are preferentially distributed along the branchings of the chordae into the anterior leaflet and then course towards the annulus fibrous. However, in the anterior leaflet a considerable amount of collagen fibres are organized in a tridimensional isotropic network even after high deformation of the tissue.  相似文献   

3.
Estimation of regional tissue stresses in the functioning heart valve remains an important goal in our understanding of normal valve function and in developing novel engineered tissue strategies for valvular repair and replacement. Methods to accurately estimate regional tissue stresses are thus needed for this purpose, and in particular to develop accurate, statistically informed means to validate computational models of valve function. Moreover, there exists no currently accepted method to evaluate engineered heart valve tissues and replacement heart valve biomaterials undergoing valvular stresses in blood contact. While we have utilized mitral valve anterior leaflet valvuloplasty as an experimental approach to address this limitation, robust computational techniques to estimate implant stresses are required. In the present study, we developed a novel numerical analysis approach for estimation of the in-vivo stresses of the central region of the mitral valve anterior leaflet (MVAL) delimited by a sonocrystal transducer array. The in-vivo material properties of the MVAL were simulated using an inverse FE modeling approach based on three pseudo-hyperelastic constitutive models: the neo-Hookean, exponential-type isotropic, and full collagen–fiber mapped transversely isotropic models. A series of numerical replications with varying structural configurations were developed by incorporating measured statistical variations in MVAL local preferred fiber directions and fiber splay. These model replications were then used to investigate how known variations in the valve tissue microstructure influence the estimated ROI stresses and its variation at each time point during a cardiac cycle. Simulations were also able to include estimates of the variation in tissue stresses for an individual specimen dataset over the cardiac cycle. Of the three material models, the transversely anisotropic model produced the most accurate results, with ROI averaged stresses at the fully-loaded state of  432.6±46.5 kPa and 241.4±40.5 kPa in the radial and circumferential directions, respectively. We conclude that the present approach can provide robust instantaneous mean and variation estimates of tissue stresses of the central regions of the MVAL.  相似文献   

4.
Wan W  Dixon JB  Gleason RL 《Biophysical journal》2012,102(12):2916-2925
Changes in the local mechanical environment and tissue mechanical properties affect the biological activity of cells and play a key role in a variety of diseases, such as cancer, arthritis, nephropathy, and cardiovascular disease. Constitutive relations have long been used to predict the local mechanical environment within biological tissues and to investigate the relationship between biological responses and mechanical stimuli. Recent constitutive relations for soft tissues consider both material and structural properties by incorporating parameters that describe microstructural organization, such as fiber distributions, fiber angles, fiber crimping, and constituent volume fractions. The recently developed technique of imaging the microstructure of a single artery as it undergoes multiple deformations provides quantitative structural data that can reduce the number of estimated parameters by using parameters that are truly experimentally intractable. Here, we employed nonlinear multiphoton microscopy to quantify collagen fiber organization in mouse carotid arteries and incorporated measured fiber distribution data into structurally motivated constitutive relations. Microscopy results demonstrate that collagen fibers deform in an affine manner over physiologically relevant deformations. The incorporation of measured fiber angle distributions into constitutive relations improves the model's predictive accuracy and does not significantly reduce the goodness of fit. The use of measured structural parameters rather than estimated structural parameters promises to improve the predictive capabilities of the local mechanical environment, and to extend the utility of intravital imaging methods for estimating the mechanical behavior of tissues using in situ structural information.  相似文献   

5.
In this study, we evaluated the hypothesis that the constituent fibers follow an affine deformation kinematic model for planar collagenous tissues. Results from two experimental datasets were utilized, taken at two scales (nanometer and micrometer), using mitral valve anterior leaflet (MVAL) tissues as the representative tissue. We simulated MVAL collagen fiber network as an ensemble of undulated fibers under a generalized two-dimensional deformation state, by representing the collagen fibrils based on a planar sinusoidally shaped geometric model. The proposed approach accounted for collagen fibril amplitude, crimp period, and rotation with applied macroscopic tissue-level deformation. When compared to the small angle x-ray scattering measurements, the model fit the data well, with an r2 = 0.976. This important finding suggests that, at the homogenized tissue-level scale of ∼1 mm, the collagen fiber network in the MVAL deforms according to an affine kinematics model. Moreover, with respect to understanding its function, affine kinematics suggests that the constituent fibers are largely noninteracting and deform in accordance with the bulk tissue. It also suggests that the collagen fibrils are tightly bounded and deform as a single fiber-level unit. This greatly simplifies the modeling efforts at the tissue and organ levels, because affine kinematics allows a straightforward connection between the macroscopic and local fiber strains. It also suggests that the collagen and elastin fiber networks act independently of each other, with the collagen and elastin forming long fiber networks that allow for free rotations. Such freedom of rotation can greatly facilitate the observed high degree of mechanical anisotropy in the MVAL and other heart valves, which is essential to heart valve function. These apparently novel findings support modeling efforts directed toward improving our fundamental understanding of tissue biomechanics in healthy and diseased conditions.  相似文献   

6.
Living tissues show an adaptive response to mechanical loading by changing their internal structure and morphology. Understanding this response is essential for successful tissue engineering of load-bearing structures, such as the aortic valve. In this study, mechanically induced remodeling of the collagen architecture in the aortic valve was investigated. It was hypothesized that, in uniaxially loaded regions, the fibers aligned with the tensile principal stretch direction. For biaxial loading conditions, on the other hand, it was assumed that the collagen fibers aligned with directions situated between the principal stretch directions. This hypothesis has already been applied successfully to study collagen remodeling in arteries. The predicted fiber architecture represented a branching network and resembled the macroscopically visible collagen bundles in the native leaflet. In addition, the complex biaxial mechanical behavior of the native valve could be simulated qualitatively with the predicted fiber directions. The results of the present model might be used to gain further insight into the response of tissue engineered constructs during mechanical conditioning.  相似文献   

7.
This paper presents a computational modeling study of the effects of the collagen fiber structure on the mechanical response of the sclera and the adjacent optic nerve head (ONH). A specimen-specific inverse finite element method was developed to determine the material properties of two human sclera subjected to full-field inflation experiments. A distributed fiber model was applied to describe the anisotropic elastic behavior of the sclera. The model directly incorporated wide-angle X-ray scattering measurements of the anisotropic collagen structure. The converged solution of the inverse method was used in micromechanical studies of the mechanical anisotropy of the sclera at different scales. The effects of the scleral collagen fiber structure on the ONH deformation were evaluated by progressively filtering out local anisotropic features. It was found that the majority of the midposterior sclera could be described as isotropic without significantly affecting the mechanical response of the tissues of the ONH. In contrast, removing local anisotropic features in the peripapillary sclera produced significant changes in scleral canal expansion and lamina cribrosa deformation. Local variations in the collagen structure of the peripapillary sclera significantly influenced the mechanical response of the ONH.  相似文献   

8.
Chondrocyte shape and volumetric concentration change as a function of depth in articular cartilage. A given chondrocyte shape produces different effects on the global material properties depending on the structure of the collagen fiber network. The shape and volumetric concentration of chondrocytes in articular cartilage appear to be related to the mechanical stability of the matrix. The present study was aimed to investigate, theoretically, the effects of the structural arrangement of the collagen fiber network, and the shape and distribution of chondrocytes, on the global material behavior of articular cartilage. Articular cartilage was assumed to be a four-phasic composite comprised of a matrix (associated with the properties of the proteoglycan structure), vertically and horizontally distributed collagen fibers, and spheroidal inclusions representing chondrocytes. A solution for composite materials was used to estimate the global, effective material properties of cartilage. Only the elasticity of the solid phase was investigated in the present study. Our simulations suggest that a soft, spheroidal cell inclusion in a fiber-reinforced proteoglycan matrix affects the material properties differently depending on the shape of the spheroidal inclusions. If the long axis of the inclusions is parallel to the collagen fibers, as in the deep zone, the soft inclusions increase the stiffness of the composite in the fiber direction, and reduce the stiffness of the composite in the direction normal to the fibers. Furthermore, we found that Young's modulus normal to the contact surface increases from the superficial to the deep zone in articular cartilage by a factor of 10-50, a finding that agrees well with experimental observations. Our analysis suggests that the combination of proteoglycan matrix, fiber orientation, and shape of chondrocytes are intimately related and are likely adapted to optimize the mechanical stability and load carrying capacity of the structure.  相似文献   

9.
A new constitutive model for elastic, proximal pulmonary artery tissue is presented here, called the total crimped fiber model. This model is based on the material and microstructural properties of the two main, passive, load-bearing components of the artery wall, elastin, and collagen. Elastin matrix proteins are modeled with an orthotropic neo-Hookean material. High stretch behavior is governed by an orthotropic crimped fiber material modeled as a planar sinusoidal linear elastic beam, which represents collagen fiber deformations. Collagen-dependent artery orthotropy is defined by a structure tensor representing the effective orientation distribution of collagen fiber bundles. Therefore, every parameter of the total crimped fiber model is correlated with either a physiologic structure or geometry or is a mechanically measured material property of the composite tissue. Further, by incorporating elastin orthotropy, this model better represents the mechanics of arterial tissue deformation. These advancements result in a microstructural total crimped fiber model of pulmonary artery tissue mechanics, which demonstrates good quality of fit and flexibility for modeling varied mechanical behaviors encountered in disease states.  相似文献   

10.
A micromechanical model has been developed to investigate the mechanical properties of the epimysium. In the present model, the collagen fibers in the epimysium are embedded randomly in the ground substance. Two parallel wavy collagen fibers and the surrounding ground substance are used as the repeat unit (unit cell), and the epimysium is considered as an aggregate of unit cells. Each unit cell is distributed in the epimysium with some different angle to the muscle fiber direction. The model allows the progressive straightening of the collagen fiber as well as the effects of fiber reorientation. The predictions of the model compare favorably against experiment. The effects of the collagen fiber volume fraction, collagen fiber waviness at the rest length and the mechanical properties of the collagen fibers and the ground substance are analyzed. This model allows the analysis of mechanical behavior of most soft tissues if appropriate experimental data are available.  相似文献   

11.
The mitral valve annulus is a complex and irregular component of the mitral valve apparatus, serving both a structural and sphincteric role. We have sought to determine the mechanical properties of the mitral valve annulus segmentally. Twenty porcine hearts were dissected to isolate the annulus. The annulus was segmented into four sections: anterior, posterior, and left and right commissural sections. Ten of these were tensile tested to failure as control samples. The remaining ten were digested in order to fully isolate the annulus from the myocardium, and subsequently tensile tested to failure. Histological samples of each segment were analysed to determine collagen/annular content. Whole segments of muscular annulus were tensile tested to failure; the stress and strain at failure and location of failure were determined in these larger specimens. Our results demonstrated that the anterior annulus is stiffer than the posterior segment by a factor of approximately 27 at a 2% strain level, and approximately 13 at a 6% strain. There is a trend in the results that identifies that the muscular annulus is stiffest at the right commissural segment, while the posterior segment tends to be the least stiff. The stiffness of the samples can be correlated with the area associated with the dense collagen annulus using histological analysis. Finally, the weakest section of the mitral valve annulus was identified as the intersection of the right commissural segment and the posterior segment.  相似文献   

12.
The present study addresses the effect of muscle activation contributions to mitral valve leaflet response during systole. State-of-art passive hyperelastic material modeling is employed in combination with a simple active stress part. Fiber families are assumed in the leaflets: one defined by the collagen and one defined by muscle activation. The active part is either assumed to be orthogonal to the collagen fibers or both orthogonal to and parallel with the collagen fibers (i.e. an orthotropic muscle fiber model). Based on data published in the literature and information herein on morphology, the size of the leaflet parts that contain muscle fibers is estimated. These parts have both active and passive materials, the remaining parts consist of passive material only. Several solid finite element analyses with different maximum activation levels are run. The simulation results are compared to corresponding echocardiography at peak systole for a porcine model. The physiologically correct flat shape of the closed valve is approached as the activation levels increase. The non-physiological bulging of the leaflet into the left atrium when using passive material models is reduced significantly. These results contribute to improved understanding of the physiology of the native mitral valve, and add evidence to the hypothesis that the mitral valve leaflets not are just passive elements moving as a result of hemodynamic pressure gradients in the left part of the heart.  相似文献   

13.
The heterogeneous composition and mechanical properties of the supraspinatus tendon offer an opportunity for studying the structure-function relationships of fibrous musculoskeletal connective tissues. Previous uniaxial testing has demonstrated a correlation between the collagen fiber angle distribution and tendon mechanics in response to tensile loading both parallel and transverse to the tendon longitudinal axis. However, the planar mechanics of the supraspinatus tendon may be more appropriately characterized through biaxial tensile testing, which avoids the limitation of nonphysiologic traction-free boundary conditions present during uniaxial testing. Combined with a structural constitutive model, biaxial testing can help identify the specific structural mechanisms underlying the tendon's two-dimensional mechanical behavior. Therefore, the objective of this study was to evaluate the contribution of collagen fiber organization to the planar tensile mechanics of the human supraspinatus tendon by fitting biaxial tensile data with a structural constitutive model that incorporates a sample-specific angular distribution of nonlinear fibers. Regional samples were tested under several biaxial boundary conditions while simultaneously measuring the collagen fiber orientations via polarized light imaging. The histograms of fiber angles were fit with a von Mises probability distribution and input into a hyperelastic constitutive model incorporating the contributions of the uncrimped fibers. Samples with a wide fiber angle distribution produced greater transverse stresses than more highly aligned samples. The structural model fit the longitudinal stresses well (median R(2) ≥ 0.96) and was validated by successfully predicting the stress response to a mechanical protocol not used for parameter estimation. The transverse stresses were fit less well with greater errors observed for less aligned samples. Sensitivity analyses and relatively affine fiber kinematics suggest that these errors are not due to inaccuracies in measuring the collagen fiber organization. More likely, additional strain energy terms representing fiber-fiber interactions are necessary to provide a closer approximation of the transverse stresses. Nevertheless, this approach demonstrated that the longitudinal tensile mechanics of the supraspinatus tendon are primarily dependent on the moduli, crimp, and angular distribution of its collagen fibers. These results add to the existing knowledge of structure-function relationships in fibrous musculoskeletal tissue, which is valuable for understanding the etiology of degenerative disease, developing effective tissue engineering design strategies, and predicting outcomes of tissue repair.  相似文献   

14.
Percutaneous approaches to mitral valve repair are an attractive alternative to surgical repair or replacement. Radiofrequency ablation has the potential to approximate surgical leaflet resection by using resistive heating to reduce leaflet size, and cryogenic temperatures on a percutaneous catheter can potentially be used to reversibly adhere to moving mitral valve leaflets for reliable application of radiofrequency energy. We tested a combined cryo-anchoring and radiofrequency ablation catheter using excised porcine mitral valves placed in a left heart flow loop capable of reproducing physiologic pressure and flow waveforms. Transmitral flow and pressure were monitored during the cryo-anchoring procedure and compared to baseline flow conditions, and the extent of radiofrequency energy delivery to the mitral valve was assessed post-treatment. Long term durability of radiofrequency ablation treatment was assessed using statically treated leaflets placed in a stretch bioreactor for four weeks. Transmitral flow and pressure waveforms were largely unaltered during cryo-anchoring. Parameter fitting to mechanical data from leaflets treated with radiofrequency ablation and cryo-anchoring revealed significant mechanical differences from untreated leaflets, demonstrating successful ablation of mitral valves in a hemodynamic environment. Picrosirius red staining showed clear differences in morphology and collagen birefringence between treated and untreated leaflets. The durability study indicated that statically treated leaflets did not significantly change size or mechanics over four weeks. A cryo-anchoring and radiofrequency ablation catheter can adhere to and ablate mitral valve leaflets in a physiologic hemodynamic environment, providing a possible percutaneous alternative to surgical leaflet resection of mitral valve tissue.  相似文献   

15.
Even though mechanical properties depend strongly on the arrangement of collagen fibers in mineralized tissues, it is not yet well resolved. Only a few semi-quantitative evaluations of the fiber arrangement in bone, like spectroscopic techniques or circularly polarized light microscopy methods are available. In this study the out-of-plane collagen arrangement angle was calibrated to the linear birefringence of a longitudinally fibered mineralized turkey leg tendon cut at variety of angles to the main axis. The calibration curve was applied to human cortical bone osteons to quantify the out-of-plane collagen fibers arrangement. The proposed calibration curve is normalized to sample thickness and wavelength of the probing light to enable a universally applicable quantitative assessment. This approach may improve our understanding of the fibrillar structure of bone and its implications on mechanical properties.  相似文献   

16.
The anulus fibrosus (AF) is a lamellar, fibrocartilaginous component of the intervertebral disc, which exhibits highly anisotropic behaviors in tension. These behaviors arise from the material's unique collagen structure. We have investigated the use of a linear, fiber-induced anisotropic model for the AF using a quadratic strain energy density formulation with an explicit representation of the collagen fiber populations. We have proposed a representative set of intrinsic material properties using independent datasets of the AF from the literature and appropriate thermodynamic constraints. The model was validated by comparing predictions with previous experimental data for AF behavior and its dependence on fiber angle. The model predicts that compressible effects may exist for the AF, and suggests that physical effects of the equivalent "matrix," "fiber," "fiber-matrix," and "fiber-fiber," interactions may be important contributors to the mechanical behavior of the AF.  相似文献   

17.
Collagen fibrils, a major component of mitral valve leaflets, play an important role in defining shape and providing mechanical strength and flexibility. Histopathological studies show that collagen fibrils undergo dramatic changes in the course of myxomatous mitral valve disease in both dogs and humans. However, little is known about the detailed organization of collagen in this disease. This study was designed to analyze and compare collagen fibril organization in healthy and lesional areas of myxomatous mitral valves of dogs, using synchrotron small-angle x-ray diffraction. The orientation, density, and alignment of collagen fibrils were mapped across six different valves. The findings reveal a preferred collagen alignment in the main body of the leaflets between two commissures. Qualitative and quantitative analysis of the data showed significant differences between affected and lesion-free areas in terms of collagen content, fibril alignment, and total tissue volume. Regression analysis of the amount of collagen compared to the total tissue content at each point revealed a significant relationship between these two parameters in lesion-free but not in affected areas. This is the first time this technique has been used to map collagen fibrils in cardiac tissue; the findings have important applications to human cardiology.  相似文献   

18.
Understanding collagen fiber remodelling is desired to optimize the mechanical conditioning protocols in tissue-engineering of load-bearing cardiovascular structures. Mathematical models offer strong possibilities to gain insight into the mechanisms and mechanical stimuli involved in these remodelling processes. In this study, a framework is proposed to investigate remodelling of angular collagen fiber distribution in cardiovascular tissues. A structurally based model for collagenous cardiovascular tissues is extended with remodelling laws for the collagen architecture, and the model is subsequently applied to the arterial wall and aortic valve. For the arterial wall, the model predicts the presence of two helically arranged families of collagen fibers. A branching, diverging hammock-type fiber architecture is predicted for the aortic valve. It is expected that the proposed model may be of great potential for the design of improved tissue engineering protocols and may give further insight into the pathophysiology of cardiovascular diseases.  相似文献   

19.
Many load-bearing soft tissues exhibit mechanical anisotropy. In order to understand the behavior of natural tissues and to create tissue engineered replacements, quantitative relationships must be developed between the tissue structures and their mechanical behavior. We used a novel collagen gel system to test the hypothesis that collagen fiber alignment is the primary mechanism for the mechanical anisotropy we have reported in structurally anisotropic gels. Loading constraints applied during culture were used to control the structural organization of the collagen fibers of fibroblast populated collagen gels. Gels constrained uniaxially during culture developed fiber alignment and a high degree of mechanical anisotropy, while gels constrained biaxially remained isotropic with randomly distributed collagen fibers. We hypothesized that the mechanical anisotropy that developed in these gels was due primarily to collagen fiber orientation. We tested this hypothesis using two mathematical models that incorporated measured collagen fiber orientations: a structural continuum model that assumes affine fiber kinematics and a network model that allows for nonaffine fiber kinematics. Collagen fiber mechanical properties were determined by fitting biaxial mechanical test data from isotropic collagen gels. The fiber properties of each isotropic gel were then used to predict the biaxial mechanical behavior of paired anisotropic gels. Both models accurately described the isotropic collagen gel behavior. However, the structural continuum model dramatically underestimated the level of mechanical anisotropy in aligned collagen gels despite incorporation of measured fiber orientations; when estimated remodeling-induced changes in collagen fiber length were included, the continuum model slightly overestimated mechanical anisotropy. The network model provided the closest match to experimental data from aligned collagen gels, but still did not fully explain the observed mechanics. Two different modeling approaches showed that the level of collagen fiber alignment in our uniaxially constrained gels cannot explain the high degree of mechanical anisotropy observed in these gels. Our modeling results suggest that remodeling-induced redistribution of collagen fiber lengths, nonaffine fiber kinematics, or some combination of these effects must also be considered in order to explain the dramatic mechanical anisotropy observed in this collagen gel model system.  相似文献   

20.
It has been reported previously that the mechanical properties of mitral valve chordae tendineae vary with chordal size and type. The popularity of mitral valve repair and chordal transposition warrant a better understanding of this phenomenon. The objectives of this study were to characterize the size- and type-related variations in chordal mechanics and explain them from the ultra-structural viewpoint. A total of 52 porcine mitral valve chordae from eight hearts were mechanically tested. We found that thicker chordae were more extensible than thinner chordae (4.2+/-1.5%, 8.1+/-2.5%, 15.7+/-3.9% and 18.4+/-2.8% strain corresponding to chordae with cross-sectional areas of 0.1-0.5, 0.5-1.0, 1.0-2.0, and 2.0-3.0mm(2), respectively), and had lower moduli (90.1+/-22.3, 83.7+/-18.5, 66.3+/-13.5 and 61.7+/-13.3 MPa corresponding to the same chordae groups). Polarized light microscopy was used to measure collagen fibril crimp. Thicker chordae had smaller crimp period than thinner chordae (11.3+/-1.4 microm vs. 14.8+/-3.0 microm), and were thus more highly crimped. Thicker chordae could therefore extend to greater strain before lock-up. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) was used to measure choral fibril ultra-structure. Thinner chordae had lower average fibril diameter than thicker chordae but greater average fibril density. The cross-sectional area occupied by fibrils, however, was found to be constant at 49+/-2% regardless of chordal size or type. The difference in moduli between thick and thin chordae can therefore be explained by differences in fibril packaging and hence fibril-to-fibril interactions. According to a simple fibril interaction model, chordae with smaller diameter fibrils will have a greater number of fibril-to-fibril interactions, and hence a greater modulus.  相似文献   

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